Cam's Plan

Keep calm & carry on

Rock under seige

Philip Hammond admits Gibraltar will be tougher to protect after Brexit vote

He added: "I would imagine the Commission is led by an honourable, trustworthy man who, in a situation when we are facing the loss of a leg or arm, might go to the country and tell the Britons: 'We want you to stay'."

"And I'm asking: did this happen or not?"

Zaoralek’s intervention comes as David Cameron will today lay out a route to Brexit as he faces the Commons for the first time since he announced his resignation on Friday.

EPA

Czech foreign minister Lubomir Zaoralek says that European Commission chairman Jean-Claude Juncker is 'not the right man for the job'

The PM will tell MPs that civil servants are beginning work to plot Britain’s formal split from Brussels.

Pro-Leave Tory MPs want him to implement the EU’s Article 50 to start a UK exit, instead of waiting for his successor to do it in October.

Tensions spiralled yesterday after senior figures claimed the country was descending into anarchy.

As Labour’s leadership coup also erupted, one Tory MP described Westminster last night as “a cluster goat f*** with knobs on”.

EPA

Zaoralek described Juncker as an 'honourable, trustworthy man' while calling for him to quit

Meanwhile, pro-EU grandees were stepping up a fightback to stop ­Britain quitting at all.

Ex-Labour PM Tony Blair fuelled calls for a second EU referendum.

He said it would be hard to re-run, but added: “Why rule anything out?”

German leader Angela Merkel’s Chief of Staff Peter Altmaier urged a UK re-think, saying our politicians “should have the possibility to reconsider the consequences of an exit”.

Chancellor George Osborne will make a statement today about his safeguards to protect the economy.

The Cabinet will also meet for the first time this morning since the poll.

No 10 said: “There will be initial discussions about the administrative process needed to move forward.”

“Decisions around Article 50 are a matter for the next Prime Minister.”

Members of the European Parliament are been pushing for David Cameron to immediately trigger the two-year exit process when he attends a summit in Brussels tomorrow.

But last night diplomats from all 27 other member states agreed that it was unrealistic for the country to formally begin negotiations until a new prime minister had been appointed.

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